Diamond Hogs lose two pitchers to season-ending injuries

Hunter Dietz hasn’t pitched in months and will undergo a second surgery. Colin Fisher had been a staple for the Diamond Hogs.

Arkansas freshmen left-handers Colin Fisher and Hunter Dietz will miss the rest of the season, coach Dave Van Horn said.

Fisher will undergo elbow surgery. Van Horn said Fisher may undergo Tommy John surgery, though preliminary signs indicate Fisher’s elbow may not be quite that bad. He could have an internal brace operation, instead. That latter is preferred because of the shorter recovery time.

Fisher has been Arkansas’ de facto No. 4 starter this season, getting the nod in a majority of Arkansas’ midweek games. Through those contests, he finished with 2.67 earned-run average with 27 strikeouts in 27 innings with just eight walks.

Dietz, who had surgery in the fall on his elbow, will have to have another one. This one will cause him to miss up to six months. He pitched in just two games after returning from the initial surgery upon the elbow aggravating him again. Dietz ultimately pitched in just one overall inning.

Arkansas, ranked No. 5 in the nation, is preparing for the homestretch of the regular season. The Diamond Hogs are second in the SEC and close with Mississippi State and Texas A&M on consecutive weekends to end the year. The MSU series will be the home finale at Baum-Walker Stadium and starts Friday.

Hogs’ prized freshman lefty Dietz should return to mound in April

Freshman left-hander Hunter Dietz struck out 13 of the 25 batters he faced for the Razorbacks in the fall.

Although he won’t be ready for Opening Day, highly-touted freshman pitcher Hunter Dietz is firmly in the plans for Arkansas Head Coach Dave Van Horn this spring.

The 6-6, 230-pound left-hander from Clearwater (Fla.) Calvary Christian High School, came to Fayetteville in the fall with a chronic elbow issue. After discussion with Van Horn and his family, Dietz decided to have a minor procedure to repair a stress fracture in his throwing arm, following the fall season.

With an already deep pitching staff in place, Van Horn is not rushing the pitcher’s recovery, but is targeting an April return.

“You won’t see him pitch until probably early April,” Van Horn said at a Swatter’s Club meeting last week. “But when you do see him pitch, you’re really going to like watching him pitch. That’s all I’m going to say.”

Perfect Game ranked Dietz as the No. 57 overall prospect, nationally, and the No. 7 lefty in the Class of 2023. He finished his senior season with a perfect 9-0 record, a 1.47 ERA, while recording 102 strikeouts in 57 innings, and led the Warriors to the Class 3A Florida state championship.

He is the highest ranked pitcher Arkansas has landed since Keaton McKinney in the Class of 2014 and the highest ranked left-hander the Razorbacks have ever had, since Perfect Game began its rankings in 2002.

Reaching upward of 95 miles per hour, Dietz pitched eight innings for the Diamond Hogs during the fall scrimmages, allowing a team-low two hits, while striking out 13 of the 25 batters he faced.

Dietz is one of the cornerstones to Arkansas’ freshman class than ranks No. 1 in the country. He would likely have been a prized selection in the 2023 MLB Draft, but had a desire to first play Division I baseball, and signed with the Razorbacks.

Arkansas will begin the season on Feb. 16, facing James Madison at Baum-Walker Stadium, in the first of a four-game series with the Dukes.

Van Horn pleased with the talent as No. 2 Razorbacks begin practices

Dave Van Horn discussed some of the position battles as the Arkansas baseball team begins practices.

As Arkansas takes the field for its first official baseball practice Friday, Head Coach Dave Van Horn is faced with a good problem to have. With so much talent at each position and on the pitcher’s mound, the veteran skipper is now tasked with deciding who to put on the field.

The Razorbacks are looking to reach the College World Series for the fourth time in six years, and will open the season ranked No. 2 in the Perfect Game Preseason Top 25, and No. 3 in the D1Baseball poll.

Not only do the Diamond Hogs have a solid core of returning players from last season’s SEC championship team, but they also added some key pieces from the transfer portal. Add to that the top incoming freshman class in the nation, and you face a dilemma.

The Hogs are slated to hold three intrasquad scrimmages over the next four days, taking Saturday off due to weather and the Razorback Invitational track meet being held next door. The first pitch will be thrown at 2 p.m. on Friday and noon on Sunday.

Van Horn said no position battles will be settled this first weekend, as he is just looking to get his players back on the field for live-game action. Arkansas opens the season on Feb. 16 in a four-game home series against James Madison.

“Really, the second weekend, the third weekend we will really have to start making some decisions,” he said. “This first weekend, let’s just see what happens.”

The pitching staff looks to be stellar, top to bottom, from the starting rotation to the bullpen. That unit will be headlined by junior All-American lefty Hagen Smith, who made 11 starts and had seven relief appearances as a true-sophomore last season.

The 6-foot-3 hurler finished with an 8-2 record and a team-leading 3.64 ERA, while adding a pair of saves. He also struck out 109 batters in 71.2 innings of work, which has all garnered him a plethora of national hype heading into this season.

“He’s handled it really well,” Van Horn said of his ace. “There have been years that we’ve had guys that were projected high picks and they stressed out over it, maybe changed their routine. We just tell our guys to do what you do every day.”

Although Smith is sure to be a high-round draft pick in June, he doesn’t seem to be letting that affect the way he prepares and performs.

“If you talk to him, it’s amazing, he just wants to win at the highest level, as a team,” Van Horn said. “And I think that’s why the players love him so much, is he just works. He’s not a big talker, but he’s been a lot more vocal this year because he knows he’s older and it’s probably his time. You can’t outwork this guy. His stuff has been amazing and I’m excited for him and his family, but I’m excited for our team because we have him on our team.”

Smith will also be surrounded by a wealth of arms that should boost the starting rotation and the bullpen production for the Razorbacks.

Highly touted freshman Hunter Dietz will be a key piece to the staff, but his presence will be put on hold to start the season. Rated the nation’s No. 5 left-handed pitcher by Perfect Game in the 2023 Class, Dietz recently underwent a minor procedure that will likely keep him out until early April.

“He’s already back to practice,” Van Horn said. “He’s doing all the drills. He’s not throwing to hitters or anything, yet. They just went in there and took care of a problem that he brought with him,”

Texas Tech junior transfer Mason Molina should also be a huge addition to the staff. The 6-foot-2 lefty was an All-Big 12 performer last season, leading the Red Raiders with six wins, 83.1 innings pitched, 108 strikeouts and a 3.67 ERA.

Although all the roles have not been defined, Van Horn is pleased with his options for starters, as well as the weapons he will have out of the bullpen.

“The bullpen is shaping up fine,” he said. “We have some really good arms. Obviously, they’ve got to go out and do it in a real game. We feel like we’ve got a really good mix or left -and right-handed pitching. The right-handed pitching is usually there, but having some options left-handed out of the pen is a big-time plus for us this year.”

The offensive attack is bolstered by the return of junior second-baseman Peyton Stovall, who is back at full-speed after suffering a torn labrum last season. He started 38 games in 2023 and has a career .277 batting average over the past two seasons, with 11 homers and 62 RBIs, along with a shining .992 fielding percentage.

Teamed with incoming sophomore shortstop Wehiwa Aloy – a Freshman All-American at Sacramento State last season – the Diamond Hogs will have a formidable middle infield.

“Man, Peyton’s been amazing – fielding and the accuracy of his arm has been great,” Van Horn said. “Getting him and Wehiwa playing together, playing catch together every day, getting to know each other – that’s one big thing, because you just want the middle infielders to know what they are doing before it happens.”

There will be a battle at first base between returning senior Ben McLaughlin and Tarleton State grad transfer Jack Wagner, who hit .337 for the Texans last season, with 15 home runs, eight doubles, four triples and 56 RBIs.

“One hits left and one hits right, but one can also DH,” Van Horn said. “Wagner can actually play some outfield if we needed him, But that’s a thing that is going to be ongoing, and that’s a good thing It’s healthy competition amongst teammates.”

With returning junior Kendall Diggs solidified in right field and Missouri grad transfer Ty Wilmsmeyer probably manning center field, the only real questions is in left. That will likely come down to returning sophomore Jayson Jones, Hutchinson Community College junior transfer Will Edmunson and Missouri senior transfer Ross Lovich.

“We’ll just have to see how that plays out,” Van Horn said. “Wilmsmeyer in center is our best defender, but we have Hunter Grimes and some other guys battling. We’ll just have to see how that all turns out. I think it will just be a work in progress, but if it comes down to just defense, it will be Wilmsmeyer.”

Diamonds Hogs freshman lefty to miss start of season recovering from elbow injury

Arkansas freshman lefty Hunter Dietz, the No. 6 recruit in the country, will miss at least the start of the Diamond Hogs’ season.

Hunter Dietz may end up being the next Hagen Smith.

It’s just going to take a little longer to know than Arkansas faithful might have preferred.

Dietz, one of the top freshman recruits in the country, will miss the early portion – and perhaps more – of the Diamond Hogs baseball season as he continues to recover from offseason elbow surgery.

The good news for Arkansas, and Dietz, is the surgery was not considered major and was more for a chronic issue than an acute one, according to reports from WholeHogSports.

Dietz, a 6-foot-6, 230-pounder from Florida, was ranked the No. 6 freshman in his recruiting class. Arkansas’ freshman class was ranked No. 1 in the nation. He was not expected to crack the Diamond Hogs’ weekend rotation this year as Smith, Brady Tygart and Mason Molina are the most likely candidates, but could have seen work as a weeknight starter.

He still could, too. No timetable was given for his return. Arkansas opens its season February 16 against James Madison at Baum-Walker Stadium.